Rethinking the Thinkpad 268
Octiaviane writes to tell us that XYZComputing has a review of Lenovo's Thinkpad X60 with a look at not only the current specs but the evolution of the Thinkpad line. From the article: "One constant which has remained throughout the evolution of the notebook computer is the Thinkpad. Processors and operating systems have changed, designs have been updated, and ownership has changed hands, but the Thinkpad remains. This product has never stopped being a top choice for demanding consumers and corporate buyers, whether they are looking for size, power, or features."
IBM Ugly (Score:5, Funny)
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ThinkPad anno 1997 [aichi.to].
ThinkPad anno 2002 [aichi.to].
ThinkPad anno 2006 [aichi.to].
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That explains why they still have that stupid IBM-in-RGB logo, even though the product is no longer made by IBM.
My department recently bought an Acer 64-bit "Ferrari" for our collective use. God, what nightmare!
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Re:IBM Ugly (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course, half the time I use a USB mouse, but still. I'm not a fan of the trackpad style control.
Re:IBM Ugly (Score:5, Informative)
No, you're not the only one :)
I remember when some laptops came with trackballs, or with optional trackball add-ons. From today's perspective it's clear that you can't fit a trackball into a decently thin laptop. There were probably also cost and durability issues that led first to trackpoints (nipples) and then to trackpads. For example in my previous laptop, a Toshiba Satellite, I had to replace the rubber bit in the trackpoint every two years or so. The current IBM version with a larger, flatter nipple seems much better in this respect.
Unfortunately, the pointer is not the only deciding factor in buying laptops, so I've ended up with a trackpad in my current machine. I believe it's the most durable of the technologies with no moving parts, but it's far from practical IMHO. For example it's distracted by the palms of my hands while typing. Fortunately it's easy to disable and enable on demand (rmmod|modprobe psmouse :).
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It's the deciding factor for some of us - not a touchpad fan - I don't want it anywhere on my system. Such a difficult attitude on my part prevents me from buying many otherwise great systems, as they don't offer 'em without the touchpad.
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And the nipple is way better. My T30 has both, and I just disable the touchpad.
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I'm not sure how to define "decently thin", but Apple had a trackball in the 1.4" thick PowerBook Duos in 1992. To compare, the ThinkPad X60 (not the X60s this article reviewed) stands nearly an inch and a half off the table at the rear. My 2001-era 500MHz white iBook is also just about 1.375", so I'd say even by todays standards 1.4" is still decently thin. It's not exactly ultraslim, but it's still competitiv
Re:IBM Ugly (Score:5, Interesting)
Our corporate IT staff refreshed us with a T42, but the software image didn't have the trackpoint wizard or whatever it's called. A few phone calls and I was able to disable the bloody thing - if you're a power typer, you will find yourself quickly losing focus from your working window as the heel of your hand exerts force on the trackpad and emulates a double-click.
My [personal] T23 doesn't have it, and they can have it when they pry my cold dead fingers from around it (well, as soon as I replace the fluorescent lamp.) It has the dreaded red tint [thinkwiki.org] on the screen and someday I will be annoyed enough to get it fixed, but I love it.
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If you're a power typer with a trackpad, you've desactivated that bloody hellish feature.
That's the first thing I do everytime I start using a new laptop.
I have buttons, they're more than enough, and they never do something I didn't ask for.
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I cna't even stand the feel of the damn thing.
Nipples for Great Justice (Score:2, Insightful)
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IBM has a great keyboard especially with the trackpoint + trackpad setups. The synergy features are great.
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It was mostly just a matter of getting used to a different way of doing things. By the time the Think-Pad was returned, I had gotten used to the Mac. Now I can switch between the Think-Pad
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The nipple is a perfect control means, it's accurate, it's quick and you don't accidentally click.
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> The nipple is a perfect control means
Um... trackpoint = nipple. Did you mean Trackpad?
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I'll let myself out.
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Trackpads are too prone to sometimes losing their centre and dragging the cursor slowly in some random direction when you let go. Touchpads are too prone to randomly going crazy and becoming completely useless for minutes at a time.
My next computer will be a desktop.
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But after using it a while, I was amazed at how inefficient it was when I tried the trackpad again. I like being able to move the mouse around all day without having to move my hand or finger at all. All you have to do is just twiddle the clit. It just seems like second nature now.
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I hate them both pretty much equally.
Bring back the trackball !
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Nipples all the way
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Oh, for someone to invent a pointer-controller for a laptop that TRULY rivals a mouse for speed and control...
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Trackpad v Trackpoint (Score:2)
This really is something accoring to taste. I wish I could get a trackpoint-style mouse for the PowerBook. However, it's certainly not an issue that will switch me to a non-Apple OS
I'd recommend
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Re:IBM Ugly (Score:4, Informative)
> have. Want to scroll from one side of the screen to the other? Best set aside 5 minutes!
Or simply push the nipple harder - works for me.
Re:IBM Ugly (Score:4, Informative)
That's correct. The thing that people who don't like the TrackPoint often don't realize is that it's force sensitive. A few hours of usage and it's way more convenient than a mouse.
The Thinkpads also come with a trackpad, which I don't use. The best pointing device I ever used was a trackpad on the old Apple Mac 540c (Blackbird). The first time I got a PC laptop with a trackpad I was amazed how a different implementation of the same idea could work so much poorly. It's amazing to refelect on the fact that that old 540c had only 4MB of RAM and a 33MHz processor, but with the exception of compiling and running a modern web broswer, it did everything I needed to do almost as well as my current laptop, a Thinkpad T42 with half a gig of memory and a processor running 30x faster.
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Think of it like a joystick without the handle and you'll do much better. Five minutes, huh?
Bias? (Score:4, Insightful)
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And you, sir, did well not to read it. The article started with "Squee Thinkpads are the best things since sliced bread and have always been, let's see that the x60s is the bestest bestest thing since hot water!"
AND you had to go through 6 pages to be told repeatedly that the x60s is the best thing ever, without any objective comparison against the competition though, because that may have required actual work.>/p>
Ouch (Score:5, Funny)
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A bit offtopic, but... (Score:3, Insightful)
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Well, at least if he's wrong on the latter, he's right on the former. Gotta give him credit for that.
This is the one laptop .. (Score:4, Interesting)
At least it finally has a Windows key..
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Try typing in a non-English language, where the diacritical marks are accessible via the right Alt key. The previous Thinkpads - including the T43 I am typing this on - were the last holdout laptops which had the full size Alt keys, making touch typing possible.
I view it as the start of the inevitable decline of the Thinkpad, which was bound to have started someti
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Indeed, both the keys that Microsloth made everybody add to their keyboards, the Windows key and the context menu key, are pretty useless. They have great potential, but MS's own UI designer seem to have forgotten that they're there.
Then again, I sometime want to access the Start menu from keyboard — it's easier than fiddling with the pointing stick. But the fact that my old Thinkpad doesn't have a Windows key is not a problem: I just hit Ctrl-Escape.
Which reminds me of the following issues from t
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Completely disagree here... I've remapped mine to be "middle click" (an option in the setup, nothing fancy) as opposed to scrolling and it's great. I can cut'n'paste using emacs properly again, I can middle click to open in a tab, it still works for scrolling in firefox combined with the trackpoint (tho it's brutal in Opera).
For me t
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Fantastic Thinkpads, but PLEASE makeover the X! (Score:4, Interesting)
Why I love them:
[1] High mechanical quality, e.g. look at the hinges holding the display, that's solid metal! My last one, a T41p looked like brand new after 18 months and I used it every day for at least 8 hours, look at a typical Sony/Dell/HP after that timeframe!
[2] best keyboard in the industry, actually I even prefer my Thinkpad keyboard over Cherry keyboards
[3] the thinkpad light above the display (I love it), the docking solutions are very advanced, support is great
I personally don't care whether it has the latest GPU, fastest harddrive, etc. - and - I'm not gonna buy a glossy screen either.
BUT _please_ give me a new thinkpad X-series tablet! I absolutely need a higher resolution than 1024x768. I would immediately (tomorrow morning, before breakfast and shower) buy a X61s tablet with resolution > 1024x768, core 2 duo and 3rd generation mobile data service (e.g. HSDPA).
But, as far as I know, it's not gonna happen. The x60/x61 tablet will still have 1024x768
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No, it's not.
WTF are you talking about?
The Macbook is...
[a] no tablet
[b] has a glossy display and
[c] has no core _2_ duo
Do you read before you post?
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Welcome to
reduced market (Score:2, Informative)
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...which is funny -- because, before IBM sold the brand name to Lenovo, guess where the laptops were made?
(Hint: Not Ohio.)
This is just politics, pure, xenophobic, and simple.
It's true that you need to watch your back when doing business in China. I've had too many Chinese friends, with too many frightening my-dad-the-doctor-was-approached-to-sell-organs-on -the-black-market type stories to be naive about that. There are plenty of good people, but Communism, poverty, and the greedy allure of soul-c
I like my HP Comapq nc6400 Business Notebook (Score:2)
The perfect laptop (Score:3, Interesting)
I've never had a laptop where I didn't wear out the keyboard in less then a year. Screens go bad too easily (and I'm scared to death to let anything touch them). Batteries, while they have improved over the last decade, still have far too little life in them.
Yet, with improving technology and manufacturing, the focus seems to be on faster processors and high performance graphics chips (which in turn eat up more power). How is it that there is no market out there for a good, cheap notebook that does the essentials (runs a browser and an office suite) that's as durable as a, well, an actual traditional paper notebook?
I'd love something that I can throw in a backpack or satchel and not have to worry if it's going to get broken by other books, or scratched to heck, or have the screen go bad from being crushed. Something that can last 15-20 hours between charging, so I don't have to always be looking for a power port. I don't need it to play games or do any high end video work. A decent, durable display that'll do 1024x768 would be fine. I don't need excessive power; a 1.6ghz processor with 128m of ram and a 50gig hdd would be more then enough. Finally, put in a keyboard that is indestructible.
I guess what I'm getting at is that I'd be more then willing to sacrifice performance for durability. Am I the only one who thinks this way? Or are there laptop manufacturers out there who make decent, cheap machines that are built like tanks, but don't necessarily have a higher end hardware inside?
Re:The perfect laptop (Score:5, Informative)
Cheap, not. But you can try Panasonic Toughbook [panasonic.com] or even beyond, check out Itronix [itronix.com].
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Don't be a pussy. The "Rugged" series Toughbook-29 weighs 8lb. Sounds like you need the exercise anyway. That's about the weight of a standard 17" notebook (though TB-29 is 13.3") and it is still lighter than those desknotes and is rated to run 5-8 hours on batteries.
They also have their "Semi-Rugged" line which look more like consumer notebooks.
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Pick one.
Personally I think laptops are cheap enough now where it's not worth worrying about how long it will last. A $500 laptop should last a few years and by the time it breaks the machine will be obsolete any way.
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A $500 laptop will last a few years if it's handled carefully. You still wouldn't throw one in your backpack full of books and other assorted hard objects.
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Refurbished Thinkpads (Score:2)
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Having said that, I bought a 12" powerbook three years ago (almost to the day) and it has been solid from a hardware POV (well, software too). What has impressed me most is the keyboard - it is very nice for a portable. Personally, I suspect all the negative publicity apple got recently over hardware problems in portables was blown out of proportion.
I haven't dropped the machine except when in my well-padded bag (and then only
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Reminds me of the first TiBooks. Remember how everyone drank Steve's Kool-Aid when
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I have a couple old ordinary business class notebooks, four and five years old and they still work fine, so I don't understand what your durability issues are. I would suggest tha
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But yes, that's more or less what I'm looking for; those seem to be pretty durible and designed for heavy use. Heck, I'd spend up to $400 on one if they could design it so it didn't look like a Play-School toy, included the OS, an entry level version of MS Office suite, and had a good battery.
I still don't s
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Original iBook (Score:2)
a feature... (Score:2, Insightful)
Or just a single feature - like the TrackPoint... Few other brands have them nowadays.
Multi Search [friskr.com]
Re:sadly, it's not as popular as you might think (Score:2)
I have used many different pointing devices on laptops over the years and I love the TrackPoint. Sadly the de facto standard is the touch pad due to sloppy TrackPoint implementations from companies like Toshiba and things like the UltraNav [ibm.com] which sacrificed usability for a better sales feat
Stubborn to the end... (Score:2)
Re:Stubborn to the end... (Score:4, Insightful)
The first thing I did on my Thinkpads was disable the horrible trackpad thing.
---John Holmes...
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Well, there are people who prefer these. I've been downgraded from a Thinkpad to a Dell :(, and I find the touchpad mightily infcomfortable in comparison to IBM's red nipple. So, even if you prefer one way of doing things, remember that there are lots of people out there, and some might actually disagree with you...
And in any case, a mouse is more convenient than any *pad a laptop can give you. If I had to choose, I'd rather the laptop was supplied with a tiny rechargeable, optical, BT-connected mouse wh
Imagine if Microsoft could re-think it (Score:3, Funny)
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Could it be that some of the beer that night did not go over the keyboard but in into your throat, which caused the next day the unfortunate 30 step drop ???
I have been impressed (Score:4, Interesting)
SD Card Readers: Pointless? (Score:2)
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T's for corporate Lenovos for personal use (Score:3, Interesting)
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If the build quality is good, the only feature I would really miss is the trackpoint, and I could probably live without that. The V100 looks like a really nice smallish laptop, and my T42 is too big to use properly on trains and such (I ride trains about 500-600 kilometres every week).
The system software update feature (Score:3, Informative)
I run Windows 2000 on my ThinkPad and the drivers and programs for that OS are still being kept up to date. When I did a reinstall of Windows 2000 a few months ago, I just installed vanilla Windows 2000, loaded the ThinkPad update program from my archive, ran it, and all the drivers necessary to support the ThinkPad hardware features were downloaded and installed.
Nice, very nice.
ThinkPads no more (Score:4, Informative)
I did buy such a "portable desktop" laptop this week: a Fujitsu Lifebook N6410. Dual core T2400 @ 1.83 GHz, 2GB RAM (upgraded myself from 512KB), 80 GB hard drive + second hard drive bay (uses SATA laptop drives; be warned that it doesn't come with the bracing frame for the 2nd hard drive; I'm still working on that), full size keyboard + numeric pad, 17" display, stereo speakers + subwoofer, 256MB nVidia graphics (128MB dedicated/128MB shared), lots of ports, DVD-write drive, etc. Size of a boat anchor, weighs a ton, only lasts about 2 hours on battery, so it's definitely not my light, lithe ThinkPad X41, but it's right up there with all my desktop systems, and it's definitely easier than packing one of my Shuttles + a flat screen in a suitcase (which I've done before).
I'll see after a few trips whether and how much I miss my ThinkPad.
By the way, if you're looking at high-end laptops like this, avoid the Toshiba Satellite P105. I bought one earlier this week from Best Buy (the P105-S9312, w/2GB of RAM and a 200 GB hard drive), got it home, and promptly ran into problems: slow, flaky performance, occasional kernel faults, etc. I let it run all night and in the morning found it had powered itself down. When I powered it up, it went through three different kernel faults during bootup, rebooting each time, then finally got itself into WinXP--only to start reporting problems with previously working software. I tried four (4) times to do a system restore using the system restore disc--and had it fail each time. When I took it back to Best Buy to get my money back, I found that someone else had come in that same morning to exchange the same model. Not a good sign of high quality assurance. YMMV.
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This will probably get me labeled (Score:2, Informative)
But Lenovos abyssimal behavior [greenpeace.org] regarding their ecological responsibilty renders them a company which just wound up on my eternal shitlist of companies from which I never ever buy anything.
Lenovo, say hi to the likes of Sony and Air France.
Slashdot covered this recently [slashdot.org].
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That's certainly a matter of opinion. Could you point out a specific Greenpeace study, which is based on hyperbole, bent statistics and lies? I thought not.
this study is a measure of how much money the companies on the list put into "green PR"
You quite obviously didn't read through the studys criteria [greenpeace.org] (you can download the criteria as a pdf via a link on the page). Granted, I'm not a scientist, and the fact how important
Examine the facts behind the Greenpeace report (Score:3, Informative)
fingerprint reader useful? (Score:2)
I don't know where people get their ideas (Score:2)
Thinkpad repair (Score:2, Interesting)
Ugh... where's the RETURN key? (Score:2)
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Note that this is NOT the dv- or V- series line of their consumer notebooks.
I personally own a HP Compaq nc6400.
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(HP/Compaq may have cleaned up its act since I had that hellish episode, but I'm not ever buying one of their products again.)
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